Donít Judge a Company By One Paper

In his column "Investing in Quality" in your Winter 2011 issue, John Morton asserts that the New York Times Co. has outperformed its competitors while
making minimal staff cuts. Unfortunately, Morton makes a simplistic error when he
interchangeably uses "the New York Times" and "the New York Times Co." The New
York Times Co. may have invested in one of its properties,
the New York Times, in recent years, but it has done so while making major cuts
at its other properties. For example, the Ledger in Lakeland, Florida, laid off 20
employees and cut eight open positions in 2010. [The Times Co. subsequently sold
the paper.] The Boston Globe threatened to close its doors unless employees took
significant pay cuts, which they did. The New York Times is a newspaper owned by
the New York Times Co. One shouldn't judge a whole company by one part.

Ted Craig

Managing editor

Used Car News

Troy, Michigan

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If you had asked me to predict which brand would debut a new logo on its Fall 2017 runway, I wouldn't have guessed Fendi. The brand already has both an iconic logo print and logo hardware that longchamp outlet it has barely capitalized on during the recent resurgence of that look in the accessories market, but for Fall 2017, those things sit alongside the Fendi brand markers we all know and love from the 90s and mulberry replica handbags early 2000s. The new logo hardware is featured prominently on a slew of new flap bags, and it's an open circle with an F resting on its side at the bottom, as though it fell that way. The new replica designer handbags logo's best use by far is as the center of a flower made of leather petals on micro bags and bag charms, several of which made it to the runway alongside the larger bags. Fendi's Zucca logo fabric, which has long been mostly missing from the brand's bags, also figured prominently in several pieces, and now is the perfect time for it to be returning to favor among the label's bag designers.